Two-Stage Analog Combining in Hybrid Beamforming Systems with Low-Resolution ADCs
Jinseok Choi, Gilwon Lee, Brian L. Evans

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel two-stage analog combining method for hybrid beamforming in mmWave MIMO systems with low-resolution ADCs, optimizing mutual information and improving system performance.
Contribution
It introduces a two-stage analog combiner design that maximizes mutual information without constant modulus constraints, with an efficient algorithm for mmWave channels.
Findings
Achieves optimal scaling law with respect to RF chains.
Provides a near-optimal solution under constant modulus constraints.
Simulation validates performance and ergodic rate approximation.
Abstract
In this paper, we investigate hybrid analog/digital beamforming for multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) systems with low-resolution analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) for millimeter wave (mmWave) communications. In the receiver, we propose to split the analog combining subsystem into a channel gain aggregation stage followed by a spreading stage. Both stages use phase shifters. Our goal is to design the two-stage analog combiner to optimize mutual information (MI) between the transmitted and quantized signals by effectively managing quantization error. To this end, we formulate an unconstrained MI maximization problem without a constant modulus constraint on analog combiners, and derive a two-stage analog combining solution. The solution achieves the optimal scaling law with respect to the number of radio frequency chains and maximizes the MI for homogeneous singular values of a MIMO…
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